Ward 84 at the Royal Manchester Children's Hospital looks after young patients with cancer and leukaemia.

It's home from home for four-year-old Ziggi Thompson. She has leukaemia and is having intensive chemotherapy.

Like most of the children here, she has lost her hair and is wheeling around a portable drip.

She's also very excited.

When Ziggi grows up, she wants to be a superhero.

Batman, Superman, Spiderman and Black Widow are on the ward, giving the children high fives and "superhero fist-bumps".

Image caption
The superheroes give children on the ward a lift

Andy, also known as Manchester's Dark Knight, says his group comes to make the children smile. He tells parents he's a crime fighter by profession, as he's a security officer at the Arndale Shopping Centre.

The children are delighted, laughing and chatting to the heroes. They barely notice as nurses do observations and change medications.

This is the largest single-site children's hospital in the UK. It has facilities for patients from birth to 18 years old.

There are toys on the rooftop garden, colourful playrooms and teen zones that look like student unions.

Ziggi's favourite part of her ward is the school room.

She was diagnosed four months ago, and initially spent five weeks in hospital. Now, she is here every other week.

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Emily Pedrazzini sleeps next to her daughter on the ward

Her mum, Emily Pedrazzini, is by her side the whole time.

Every night, she sleeps on a pull-out bed next to Ziggi's hospital bed. She stays with Ziggi, while her husband looks after their six-year-old son, Zach.

She says she has to mentally prepare herself every time they come in - "knowing that I don't leave the room for a whole week, I don't get to see my son, I don't get to take him to school".

But, she says, it's become part of her normal life now. "Everyone is in the same boat. The kids play. And you get into your daily routines," she says.

Image caption
A children's ward in 1948

This is a far cry from paediatrics in 1948. Back then, parents were allowed to visit children perhaps once a week.

Andrea Merrall was Ziggi's age at the time. She had a long stay in hospital with tuberculosis.

She says she used to scream and shout when her parents left. Eventually, she made such a fuss that her parents were banned from coming in at all.

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